4 GOINGS ON ABOUT TOWN 7 and 10 :30; and Sundays at 7 :30. Matinées Sundays at 3.) THE KITCHEN-A crisis or hvo in the kitchen of a large restaurant, as set forth by the English dran1ati",t '\rnold \Vesker. With a couple of s0111ewhat stronger performances in the lead- ing roles, it n1ight ha\'e seenled a po\verful playas \\ ell as the fascinating doctllllentary it is. Jack Gelber is responsible for the skill- ful direction. (8 I st Street Theatre, Broad- \\,ay at 8 I st St. 799-30 I o. Tuesdays through Fridays, and Sundays, at 8 :30, and Saturdays at 7 :30 and 10:30. l\latinées Sundays at 3.) THE MAD SHow--LighÌ\veight satire is the main ingredient of this musical revue, which boasts a cast n1ade up of a quintet of highly ingra- tiating young perforn1ers. The piece has n1usic by lVIary Rodgers. (X ew Theatre, 154 E. 54th St. PL 2-0440. Tuesdays through Thursdays, and Sundays, at 9, and Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 and 10:30. 1IIatinées Saturdays and Sundays at 3.) MAN OF LA MANCHA-Richard Kiley is superb in the dual role of Don Quixote and his creator in this nlusical by Dale Wassenllan. The n1usic, by Mitch Leigh, is cOllllllendable as i", the stagin.g, by Albert l\1arre, but the play as a \\ hole IS spotty, and the choreography, by Jack Cole, runs to burlesque-house rou- tines. (ANTA \Vashington Square Theatre 40 \t\. 4 t h St., between W ashington Squar and Broadway. 674-5600. Tuesdays through Saturdays at 8: 30. TvIatinées Wednesdays at 2 and Saturdays and Sundays at 2 :30.) THE POCKET W ATCH-A play by A.lvin Aronson. (11ennaid Theatre, 422 \\1. 42nd St. 73 6 - 4 0 73. Tuesdays through Fridays at 8 :4 0 ; Sat,-:r ays at 7 and 10; and Sundays at 7 :30. ::\fatInees Sundays at 3.) SERJEANT MUSGRAVE'S DANCE- .t\ preachy lllelo- drama done in the Victorian 111anner and set in Victorian England. \\1. B. Brvdon plays the fanatical leader of some dese rters frOlll the Queen's AnllY who COllle to a northern coal town in order to expose the horrors and cruelty of war. The play, by John Arden, s.eellls cluttered and synthetic, but The Estab- hshlnent has given it a good production under Stuart Burge's direction. (Theatre d Lys, 121 Christopher St. W A 4-8782. Tues- days through Fridays at 8 :30; Saturdays at 7 and 10: 3 0 ; and Sundays at 8. TvIatinées Sundays at 3. Closes Sunday, July 17.) UNTIL THE MONKEY COMES. . .-A play by Ven- able Herndon. (11artinique Theatre, Broad- way at 3-:nd St. PE 6-3056. Tuesdays through FrIdays at 8 :40; Saturdays at 7 :3 0 and 10 :30; and Sundays at 7. 11atinées Sun- days at .) A VIEW FROM THE BRIDGE-A revival of Arthur 1Iiller's lllelodrallla about the Brooklvn wa- terfront. (Sheridan Square Playhot;se, 99 Seventh Ave. S., at Sheridan Sq. CH 2-343 2 . Tuesdays through Fridays, and Sundays, at 8 :4 0 , and Saturdays at 7 :30 and 10:30. Mati- nees Sundays at 3.) THE WORLD OF GÜNTER GRASs-A progranl of excerpts fronl the poelllS and novel", of the 1110dern German writer, as recited and per- fonlled by a COlllpany of five. The actors do pretty \vell, but it is TvIr. Grass, his \vords evoking the spirit of wartime and postwar Germany, ,",vho steals the show. (Pocket Thea- tre, 100 Third Ave., at 13th St. ytJ 2- 011 5. Tuesdays through Fridays at 8 :30; Saturdays at 7 and 10: and Sundays at 8. TvIatinees Sun- days at 3.) MISCELLANY NEW YORK SHAKESPEARE FESTIVAL-Free perfornl- anCe of ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL, with Bar- bara Barrie, Richard Jordan, and Staats Cots- worth. The first in a series of three plays by the company. (Delacorte Theatre, Central Park near W. 8ISt St. Nightly, except 1IIon- days, at 8. Closes Saturday, July 2. For in- fOrIllation about tickets, call 535-5 6 3 0 .) NIGHT LIFe (Some places where you ,vill find music and/or other entertainn1ent They are open every eve- ning, except as indicated) DINNER, SUPPER, AND DANCING AMERICANA, Seventh Ave. at 52nd St. (LT I- 1000 )-In the Royal Box, at dinner and sup- per, Edie Adams, a trouper and a troupial of considerable experience, holds the fort, and s- M. T-W. T- F.S 26/27128 12 9 ; t 41 25 2 fortissimo. The orchestra of Lee Evans, which does the dance lnusic, is lllore or less a work of art. Nothing doing on SunddY, dnd after the soirée on vVednesday, June 29, the enterprise begins a brief holiday. BARBERRY, 17 E. 52nd St. (PL 3-5800)-The newest n1idtown merger, cOlnblnlng the cor- porate structure of the Barberry (TvIoorish) and the Little Club (candy-striped all the \Vay, up to but not including Billy Reed, now the padrone of the joint enterprise). In the Little end of the merger, Horace Diaz's band plays for dancing Mondays through Thurs- days from nine to two, and Fridays and Sat- urdays from ten to three. No music Sundays. DELMONICO'S, Park Ave. at 59th St. (EL 5- 2500)-The age of chivalry prevails on the parquet floor of the restaurant between nine and one or two. Cliff Hall's band provides the athletes' instrumentation No players on Sundays or TvIondays. EL MOROCCO, 307 E. 54th St. (PL 2-5079)- The ascension to the throne of John TvElls has given this renovvned boardroom a lot of body English, which is what a whole bunch of old-line colonists have always wdnted The ll1usic issues from the bands of Freddy Al- onso and Charles Bubeck Closes for the sumlller after Saturday, June 25. PIERRE, Fifth Ave. at 6Ist St. (TE 8-8000)- Ben Cutler's brisk little band gets a great deal of bounce to the ounce in the Café Pi- erre-enough for every night of the week. Franco Pagani, an equally brisk tenor sounds off in between seb every night but Sunday. PLAZA, Fifth Ave. at 5 th St. (PL 9-3 0 00)- It's the tÜlle of year when fresh flowers of new pecies appear in the Persian ROOlll, and such is the San Francisco oprano Bobbe K orris, who is often brighter than her ll1en- tors, or perhaps tormentors The orchestras of TvIark 110nte (piquant) and Burt Farber (sonorous) are the flanker backs. Saturday, June 25, is her last night. The establishlllent reSUllles activitie on \\1 ednesday, July 6. . . . ç Fiddle and piano Vv hisper a way frOln four-thirty to six-thirty in the PalIll Court the nicest era of the whole nineteenth cen tury, and again from seven to nine in the Edwardian Room.... ç At eight, the Palm Court becOllles a villa in Arcady, with nynlphs bearing the tritullphs of pastry chef, coffee brewer, and vintner, the whole overspread by the pastoral airs of Gunnar Hansen's vio- lin. The artful illusion is visible until one every night but Sunday. PROMENADE CAFÉS, in the lower plaza of Rocke- feller Center. (246-5800)-On Monday, June 27, the great outdoors of Rockefeller Center again becollles a dance pavilion \vith music and provender from the English' Grill. RAINBOW GRILL, 30 Rockefeller Plaza (PL 7- 8970 )-A skyport without the dubious benefit of helicopters being devoted instead to all-enlbracing views and music' some of it concert and SOllle of it dancing. Carn1en Cavallaro's quintet, which is honeysuckle rosé, has the floor. No sound on Sundays. THE RIVERBOAT, Fifth Ave. at 34th St. (PL 9- 2444 )-A glo\ving tribute to the days \\ihen our floating population considered the stealll- boat the only way to go. In the middle of it all, Les and Larry Elgart's orchestra is at its contrapuntal best. The action goes on from eight to two. No music Sundays. ST. REGiS-SHERATON ROOF j Fifth Ave. at 55th St. (PL 3-4500)-The Highland Fling would be the appropriate exercise for this lofty point '''''r l{l I :. . _ . ". I' -y -" r ,-, '1 - ßII4C " ,.., r ,-'J I 'y' ""\ '" " â . 2BD ! IR I' iI: -.....P i SI . - _""'....õ:.. :: ;:.. . ........'.:,. 1í '."'... 4 ....;. 1..!'I . III II . I"' "!' 5'iI \ ., r '..I d IÌ' ll I!... II:- "M .=ta '"':: .1,. ii: !.: :: l;:.. '. ;'M ."""'U..... ': : ' !II 'lj,!: r 9!. - - fool of view, but the custOlllers for George Cort s orchestra and Quintero's band, \vhich run on fron1 eight to two, are 111uch more conserva- tive. Clo ed Sunday and TvIondays TAVERN-ON-THE-GREEN, Central Park W. at 67th St. (TR 3-3200)-Under the spreading chest- nut trees, there is ll1usic by l-'hil Wayne's band, once of the Pierre's lalnented Cotillion ROOlll, and a quota of Latins. 1 hey workout fron1 eight until one. In case of now, sleet, or other sunUller specialties, everybody in- doors at once. WALDORF-AsTORIA, Park Ave. at 49th St (EL 5- 3000)-Ray Hartley's baroque pIano orna- n1ents Peacock Allev frOln cocktaIl tÎ1lle un- til eleven every t 'ening but l riday and Saturday. On Friday and Saturday, June 24- 25, there will be a dance trio froln eIght to one. NOTE-ROSELAND DANCE CITY, 239 W. 52nd St. (CI 7-0200)- The largest single portlon of Inner Space in the whole city, and occupied by seri- ous, non-Twist dancers. They are fringed by two ceaseless bands, one N orte and one Sud, which tee off at aLout seven-thirty during the \Veek and stay put until around one; Sundays they start oft at three-thirty. For insatiables, there are Thursday and Saturday matinees frOlll one-thirty to six, and a Roor show at eleven every Tuesday. Clo ed TvIondays. SMALL AND BOUNCY (Dining but no dancing, except as noted.) GOLDIE'S NEW YORK, 244 E. 53rd St. (PL 9-7 2 45) : Eternal springs are the underpinning of the pianos of Sall1 Halnilton (who does the cock- tail hour) and of vVayne Sanders and Goldie Hawkins hÜnself, who do solo Rights during the evening, then up-and-con1ing tandem music after the theatre-all this for fanciers of eat-drink-and-be-n1erry. Closed Friday through Monday, July 1-4. . . . IN BOBOLl, 1591 Second Ave., at B2nd St. (TR 9-3777): A Florentine conservatorv of music where "La Serva Padrona" is beIng presented twice d night by the tiny operetta COlllpany in resi- dence. Thursday through Saturday each week, there is languorous dance lIlusic, too. Clo ed 110nda ys... . JAMAICA ARMS, 1315 Second Ave., at 69th St. (YU 8-5850): The right little, tight little island at its evening's ease, through which a wandering island minstrel parades frolll eight until tvvo Thursdays through Saturdays, frOln seven until eleven Sundays, and fronl nine to one NIondays through Wednesdays. . . . BELL'S, 314 E 70th St. (UN I - I 4 I 9): A neighborhood gathering place. \ Vhat the boys and girls in the back room \vill have is the trio of George Taylor-none of it insistent, all of it cheerful, every night but Sunday. . . . CHARLIE BATES, 1487 First Ave., at 78th St. (734-9777): A neighborhood pub, aÎ1lled at looking and sounding 1900. The honky-tonk piano is supplemented by the Dirty Shames, who sing in a lllood that COllles much closer to our current one. Sundays, on the other hand, there are four-to-one sessions by the Slllith Street Jazz Society Banel. . . . CHUCKS' COMPOSITE, 303 E. 53rd St. (EL 5- 8825): The junior grades of show business and the kindred arts have their after-hours here Sort of cookout are the aura and the diet, and the spirit of the good life is en- hanced every night but Sunday by Cecil Young's three-Illan exposition of new-school glee in music. On Sundays, sitting-in jazz groups work out frOl11 five-thirty to eleven- thirty. . . . LA CHANSONNETTE, 890 Second Ave, at 47th St. (PL 2-7320). The operator of this tiny niche, Rita DÎ1llitri, who is Naughty TvIarietta to the life, does her great-gusto nights-in-Paris arias at dinner weeknights, at both dinner and supper Fridays and Satur- days. Sedate dance lllusic begins at eight. Closed Sundays. . . . CHARDAS, 307 E. 79th St. (RH 4-9382): Oh, those lovely lost years in 11ittel-europa! Among the \\orshippers are tenors (especially the noble old-school Tibor Rakossy) , sopranos, violins, zÎ1llbalon, and whatever. vVorshippers who wish to dance have Bela Babai's band at their toes. Closes for its lllidyear vacation after Sunday, J llne 26. . . . WAVERLY LOUNGE, 103 Waverly PI. (AL 4-0776): Laurie Brewis, \vho has manned one piano for the past eleven years, is the definitely permanent party in the busy-bee corner-saloon lounge of the Hotel Earle, vvhere he devotes his tÎ1lle-after nine-thirty every evening but Monday-to a retrospec- tive show of the music we grew up with. ... ASTI. 13 E. 12th St. (AL 5-9773): Seldom,